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  1. Arnold Büscher (16 December 1899 – 2 August 1949) was a German SS officer. Holding the rank of SS- Obersturmführer, he served as a commandant of the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp, succeeding Amon Göth, from September 1944 until January 1945.

  2. Arnold Büscher (* 16. Dezember 1899 in Rehme (jetzt Bad Oeynhausen); † 2. August 1949) war ein deutscher KZ-Kommandant. Er war der Leiter der Lagerwache im KZ Plaszow im Zeitraum September 1944 bis etwa Januar 1945.

  3. www.kz-gedenkstaette-neuengamme.de › fr › historiqueListe des camps extérieurs

    On n’a pas beaucoup de renseignements sur les deux derniers chefs du camp, Arnold Büscher und Schwanke. Pendant les deux premiers mois, la garde avait été assurée par des SS français, remplacés ensuite par environ 200 artilleurs de la Marine.

  4. After Göth’s arrest, the camp passed into the hands of SS-Obersturmführer Arnold Büscher. Though no saint himself, Büscher immediately made life more bearable for the prisoners in his charge by upping their rations and stopping the random hangings and shootings that were a daily feature of camp life under Göth. Kraków-Płaszów was ...

  5. Le 13 septembre 1944, Göth est relevé de ses fonctions et remplacé par Arnold Büscher. Peu après, en novembre 1944, il est accusé d'avoir détourné à son profit, lors de la liquidation des ghettos notamment de Varsovie et de Tarnow, des biens qui appartiennent au Reich. Son complice, le Lagerälteste Chilowicz, l'avait aidé à amasser ...

  6. Under Arnold Büscher, the camp's second commandant, prisoners did not experience any shootings or hangings. However, by 1943, the camp was notorious for its terrors. Amon Göth, an SS commandant from Vienna, was the camp commandant at this point. He was sadistic in his treatment and killing of prisoners. "Witnesses say he would ...

  7. www.kz-gedenkstaette-neuengamme.de › en › historySatellite camps - Startseite

    Little is known about the two final commanders of the camp, Arnold Büscher and a man named Schwanke. During the first two months, the prisoners were guarded by French SS men who were eventually replaced by around 200 navy artillerymen.